The Tragedy of the Missing Barzanis

The Barzani tribe had long been a thorn in the flesh of the Iraqi central government. Hostilities reached boiling point during the Iraq-Iran War when Saddam Hussein accused them of collaborating with the Iranians. Soon afterwards between 5,000 and 8,000 Barzani tribesmen were abducted and never seen again.

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Survivors of Kureme

In 1988 the Iraqi army launched a ferocious attack on Kurdish communities south of the Turkish border. Fleeing towards Turkey, the villagers of Kureme found their route blocked by Iraqi soldiers and were captured. The male villagers were put in front of a firing squad – yet six survived to tell their story.

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‘I lay on my back and it felt like there was a hole in my chest’

Iraqi planes attacked some 70 Kurdish villages with poison gas in the Bahdinan region of Kurdistan, just south of the Turkish border. MOHAMMED ALI AHMED was semi-conscious for days after inhaling the toxic fumes.

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‘Iraqi soldiers struck the young men in front of their parents with a metal hose’

After Iraqi jets gassed Kurdish peshmerga strongholds in the Gara mountains, 99 men from Guze village were rounded up and executed. AISHA HAJI SALAM describes how her two sons were taken from her and never seen again.

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‘“We must abandon our baby,” I told my wife, but she couldn’t let him die’

Peshmerga in the far north of Kurdistan fled with their families towards Iran to escape poison gas attacks. When his leader Masoud Barzani told him it was impossible to send support units, commander AMIN HUSSEIN AHMED realised there was no escape.

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‘They told us 13 villagers had been killed and we panicked’

The Iraqi military launched poison gas attacks south of the Turkish border to crush the peshmerga army of Masoud Barzani. AHMED KHALID AHMED witnessed the first chemical attack in Bahdinan. He describes the panic that swept through the village.

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‘Sadiq aimed his gun, “If you throw your baby into the river, I’ll shoot you dead”’

When clouds of poison gas drifted across the Gara mountains families from Guze village were driven to acts of desperation to survive. Numb with exhaustion and despair, SALEEM HASSAN SALEEM was prepared to abandon his baby child in an icy river.

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‘I didn’t know the flag I made for the Kurds would be so important’

A flag sewn by a 14-year-old girl called FATIMA ASSAD SHAHIN became a powerful symbol for the short-lived Kurdish Republic of Mahabad in Iran. Fatima's flag has since become an icon in Kurdistan.

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